- food - go visit any restaurant or mall, see how people leave their food untouched,

- secure place to sleep - i actually think, this one is a bit harder, because this is our weakest point, the moment people dare to rob us, and continually stay alert would have impact to our own body,

- commitment - this is one of the harder part too, because you cant choose what lifestyle you want as you wish when you already involved others inside your life, your wife, your parent, etc, kids,

-

- this is another story, about the logicomix

Quote:

Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth is a graphic novel about the foundational quest in mathematics, written by Apostolos Doxiadis, author of Uncle Petros and Goldbach's Conjecture, and theoretical computer scientist Christos Papadimitriou of the University of California, Berkeley. Character design and artwork are by Alecos Papadatos and color is by Annie Di Donna.

- the graphics are so beautiful,

-

Quote:

In philosophy and logic, the classical liar paradox or liar's paradox is the statement of a liar who states that they are lying: for instance, declaring that "I am lying" or "everything I say is false". If they are indeed lying, they are telling the truth, which means they are lying.

- the struggle to find truth, to find something that we could hold,

- the logic of infinity,

- imagine about infinity could cause me so much excitement, the very large number,

- actually, pondering about circle is kinda excitement too,

- lying on coach, let the mind imagines, and entertain those inputs, damn, what a great moment,

Dude that's 3 different operational modes, it doesn't count that way Since the currently running mode is what counts as RISC. (I mean, all the basic operations are shared anyway, just different encodings, an add is still an add, etc)

I was talking about instructions; otherwise, there's way too many encodings for the "same" instruction even in x86 (actually even more so due to memory operands which RISC don't have except on dedicated instructions). Also, Thumb fewer than what? You said X + Y + Z, I simply said, pick one, not necessarily Thumb.

I know you'll say "instructions" is vague, but from the point of what it actually does, it's not really "vague".

Uhm, I mean actual effects of the instruction (in general, not special case). sub reg, reg and xor reg, reg are different since they are only identical with "reg, reg" combination etc (just to clarify). Of course, stuff like "cmov" I consider as one instruction with different suffixes/modes/prefixes etc. More like "common sense" than not. It's not super technically precise, but then, neither is the RISC/CISC definition anyway.

I wouldn't consider "add eax, ebx" and "add al, bl" as two different instructions though... even if they have different opcodes (not even override prefix).

Ultimately these instructions does have a "logic" behind being labeled like this: they likely share the same hardware under-the-hood too.

The German-born physicist had won the Nobel and was in Japan on a lecture tour.

When the courier came to his room to make a delivery, he did not have any money to reward him.

Instead, he handed the messenger a signed note - using stationery of the Imperial Hotel Tokyo - with one sentence, written in German: "A calm and humble life will bring more happiness than the pursuit of success and the constant restlessness that comes with it."

A second note written at the same time simply reads: "Where there's a will, there's a way." It sold for $240,000, Winner's auction house said.

Since there's always an opcode followed by extra bytes (mod R/M, imm, disp, SIB, etc) or preceeded by prefixes. Or an opcode extension. Either way, the only thing "add al" and "add eax" differ in is the opcode byte, thus their opcode is different.

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